Horne v. State Industrial Insurance System

936 P.2d 839, 113 Nev. 532, 1997 Nev. LEXIS 47, 1997 WL 202752
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1997
Docket27033
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 936 P.2d 839 (Horne v. State Industrial Insurance System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horne v. State Industrial Insurance System, 936 P.2d 839, 113 Nev. 532, 1997 Nev. LEXIS 47, 1997 WL 202752 (Neb. 1997).

Opinions

[533]*533OPINION

By the Court,

Young, J.:

On January 5, 1991, appellant Donna Horne (“Horne”) was physically attacked by a man while she was employed as a security guard. She sustained injuries, and respondent State Industrial Insurance System (“SIIS”) accepted her claim and paid her worker’s compensation benefits.

In August 1991, Horne had what appeared to be an extreme attack of asthma for which she was hospitalized. She later went to a doctor who diagnosed her with a newly discovered disorder called Paradoxical Vocal Cord Dysfunction (“PVCD”). He believed this disorder resulted from her January 5, 1991 industrial injury.

Horne subsequently attempted to reopen her January 5, 1991 claim with SIIS, which denied her request. She appealed this decision to the hearing officer, who affirmed SIIS’s decision to deny benefits. Horne then appealed to the appeals officer who overturned the hearing officer’s decision and granted reopening of the claim. SIIS petitioned for judicial review to the district court, which reversed the appeals officer’s decision on the grounds that there was insubstantial evidence of Horne’s current condition or that it was causally connected to the January 5, 1991 injury. Horne now appeals to this court, alleging that the district court erred in reversing the appeals officer’s decision.

Without substituting our judgment for that of the appeals officer, we conclude that the district court did not err in finding that there was not enough evidence to reopen Horne’s January 5, 1991 claim. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s order reversing the appeals officer’s decision.

FACTS

In 1991, Horne was employed as a security guard and an emergency medical technician at the Dunes Hotel Complex in Las Vegas. On January 5, 1991, while patrolling her assigned area within the scope of her employment, Horne was attacked from behind by a man, who grabbed her by the face. The man snatched her radio out of her hand and hit her over the head with it. When Horne attempted to escape, the man grabbed her clothing and pulled her toward him until her head hit his chest. He ripped her shirt open. All the while, he was continually hitting her in the head with the radio. Shortly before she fell to the floor, he appropriated her weapon. He then started to kick her, while [534]*534she begged him to stop. The next thing she remembered was that the attack ended and the man was no longer present.

Horne’s injuries consisted of headaches, swelling and bruising on her face and lower back, a “puffy” eye, and bruising on her legs and arms. The medical reports in January 1991 do not mention any neck injuries nor whether Horne was choked by her assailant. One report specifically noted that upon a January 8, 1991 examination of Horne, there was no neck pain upon palpation. However, Horne’s voice became hoarse immediately after the attack, and she subsequently claimed that she also sustained neck injuries from the attack due to being choked.

Horne filed a worker’s compensation claim with SIIS for her industrial injuries relating to the January 5, 1991 attack. SIIS accepted this claim and provided compensation.

Seven months later, in August 1991, Horne had an extreme attack of what appeared to be asthma,1 whereupon she was admitted to the hospital. Horne filed a new claim with SIIS for this incident, which was denied because it was not industrially related. She then appealed this decision to the appeals officer; a hearing was conducted on March 24, 1992. Appeals officer Virginia Hunt upheld SIIS’s denial because there was evidence that this episode was related to allergies and was, therefore, not industrially related.

Sometime thereafter, Horne was referred to Dr. Jim Christensen (“Dr. Christensen”), an allergy and clinical immunology specialist. He diagnosed her with PVCD, a newly discovered disorder often confused with asthma.2

In a March 2, 1993 letter addressed to “Whom It May Concern,” Dr. Christensen stated, “It is entirely possible that there is a causal relationship between her traumatic injury to her neck and throat and the recrudescence of this vocal cord dysfunction.”

In September 1992, based on Dr. Christensen’s diagnosis of PVCD, Horne attempted to reopen the January 5, 1991 industrial injury claim. Horne later submitted Dr. Christensen’s March 2, 1993 letter as evidence that her PVCD was causally connected to the January 5, 1991 industrial injury. On April 2, 1993, SIIS denied the request to reopen the claim, explaining that “the vocal cord [dysfunction] was not ever included in your industrial injury of January 5, 1991. Your industrial injury was caused to a blow in [535]*535the back of your head. Therefore, the vocal cord dysfunction is Non-Industrially related.”

On April 7, 1993, Horne appealed the denial of compensation to the hearing officer. On May 5, 1993, a hearing was held, and on May 6, 1993, the hearing officer affirmed SIIS’s decision to deny compensation to Horne. The hearing officer determined that “[Horne] has failed to meet her burden of proof that the [PVCD] is causally related to the industrial injuries sustained on January 5, 1991.”

Horne then appealed the hearing officer’s decision to the appeals officer. On June 23, 1993, a hearing was conducted by Appeals Officer Virginia Hunt, the same officer who previously denied Horne’s request to open a new claim for her August 1991 injury. At this hearing, Horne testified as to the January 5, 1991 industrially related injury and the August 1991 incident. She also testified as to Dr. Christensen’s assessment of her condition. The only medical documentary evidence that Horne presented was Dr. Christensen’s March 2, 1993 letter and a June 7, 1993 letter from Dr. Christensen to Horne’s attorney, stating that he believed Horne’s neck trauma was related to her PVCD. In addition, Horne’s mother testified that Horne’s voice became hoarse directly after the January 5, 1991 attack.

SIIS presented no witnesses nor conflicting medical evidence to dispute the existence of PVCD. SIIS did, however, supply two articles about PVCD in its attempt to demonstrate the weak medical evidence presented by Horne. SIIS also disputed that Horne even sustained a neck injury on January 5, 1991. “Your Honor, there’s no documentation of any trauma to the neck. . . . We can’t say any kind of trauma triggered this so-called disease that [Horne] has.”

On August 6, 1993, the appeals officer’s decision was filed, reversing the hearing officer’s decision and granting Horne’s request to reopen her January 5, 1991 claim to include her PVCD condition. The appeals officer specifically found as follows:

(1) [Horne] has testified credibly to the worsening of her condition. [Horne] testified credibly to her symptomatology and events of the industrial accident.
(2) Dr. Jim Christensen’s medical documentation supplied a sufficient causal connection for acceptance of the additional injury of vocal cord dysfunction. Dr. Christensen also documented the necessary treatment available for [Horne].

On August 19, 1993, SIIS petitioned the district court for judicial review pursuant to NRS 233B.130 and based on all the [536]

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Bluebook (online)
936 P.2d 839, 113 Nev. 532, 1997 Nev. LEXIS 47, 1997 WL 202752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horne-v-state-industrial-insurance-system-nev-1997.